At FlavorwireJonathan Sturgeonconsiders what we've learned from Dubliners in the hundred years since it was first published and argues that "when it comes to realism, Dubliners, more than even Chekhov’s short fiction, is the model we routinely fail to live up to." Sturgeon's reflections on Joyce's free indirect discourse pair well with Jonathan Russell Clark's Millionsessay on close writing, and his essay isn't completely without hope: he concludes with a few books that, "on the surface, look nothing like Dubliners, but, in spirit... show that Joyce’s book still lives 100 years on."

On Friday, Christie's will be auctioning off Cormac McCarthy's Olivetti manual typewriter, which he's had since 1963. Looks like you need to make sure you've got at least $15,000 in your checking account if you plan on bidding. (NY Times article here)